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Spanish-Italian Transparency

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Hexaglot
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 Message 1 of 52
09 January 2010 at 9:54pm | IP Logged 
For those who wonder about how close Italian is to Spanish, I saw in Spain intriguing conversations where one person spoke in Italian with the other nodding and answering in Spanish. This in a tourist setting, with people probably not bilingual in both languages. I saw it several times when Italian tourists where discussing with Spaniards who spoke no Italian but understood it.

People who study both Italian and Spanish can see for themselves the proximity, but I thought that perhaps hearing about this natural test of transparency would interest some of you.
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William Camden
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 Message 2 of 52
09 January 2010 at 10:01pm | IP Logged 
I've used Spanish as a default language talking to Italians on several occasions. Not perfect intelligibility (my Spanish isn't great) but it more or less worked.
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TheBiscuit
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 Message 3 of 52
10 January 2010 at 12:59am | IP Logged 
When I taught English to multilingual classes in London I would often see the Spanish, Italian and Portuguese speakers having conversations with each other in their respective languages. It is interesting to listen to.
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victor-osorio
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 Message 4 of 52
10 January 2010 at 1:40am | IP Logged 
Well, I'm a native speaker of Spanish and all I can say is that the transparency of
those three Romance languages (Italian, Portuguese and Spanish) is highly overrated. I
mean, we can understand a great deal of lexical content (e.i., nouns) and thus we can
interpret, based on the context, what are we talking about. It's a matter of guessing
more than understanding on my own experience.

Once, I went to London and stayed at a young traveller's hostal. I shared a room with a
brazilian guy. We could talk about things BUT IT WAS PRETTY IMPORTANT to be in front of
the things we were talking in order to understand each other. Also, it was very
difficult to talk about abstract stuff. The simple word "forget" in Spanish and
brazilian was SO different. OLVIDAR in Spanish and ESQUECER on portuguese. I spend like
20 minutes trying to tell him that "I forget your name". Not funny.

Anyway, people often think that it's easier to understand, let's say, Italian when you
speak Spanish but in my experience, once you learn Italian, you realise there's A LOT
of details you're missing in the information if you don't know the language.

The difference between Spanish and Italian, I've read somewhere, is something like 30%
of the words. That means that probably you will be missing 30% of the information. A
big deal, IMHO.
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Guido
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 Message 5 of 52
10 January 2010 at 10:02am | IP Logged 
The trasparency between those 3 languages is very high, something like
+80%. Personally, I think it's not overrated. But, yes, it's more guessing than
understanding, since the non-italian speaker don't even know how to conjugate verbs in
Italian.

I know some people that don't speak Italian but get the idea of what Italians are talking
about (as long as they don't speak too fast). The same goes for Portuguese.

Have a nice day!
Guido-

Edited by Guido on 10 January 2010 at 10:02am

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William Camden
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 Message 6 of 52
10 January 2010 at 4:41pm | IP Logged 
In the Spanish film Ay Carmela, set in the Spanish Civil War, an Italian fascist soldier complains to the main Spanish characters, "Why can't you speak Italian?" He refers particularly to their pronunciation of Macedonia cigarettes. They say Mathedonia, he says Machedonia. Yet they can more or less communicate with each other.
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datsunking1
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 Message 7 of 52
10 January 2010 at 4:49pm | IP Logged 
I could understand most of what my ex girlfriends family said in Brazilian Portuguese, and I didn't even start studying it yet :)
hahaha

The best thing about Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, etc is that many words are similar/the same, and many articles are the SAME in each language :D
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Fasulye
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 Message 8 of 52
10 January 2010 at 6:27pm | IP Logged 
administrator wrote:
For those who wonder about how close Italian is to Spanish, I saw in Spain intriguing conversations where one person spoke in Italian with the other nodding and answering in Spanish. This in a tourist setting, with people probably not bilingual in both languages. I saw it several times when Italian tourists where discussing with Spaniards who spoke no Italian but understood it.

People who study both Italian and Spanish can see for themselves the proximity, but I thought that perhaps hearing about this natural test of transparency would interest some of you.


This is a useful observation. I would theoretically have prognosed that this can function, as I see enough similarities in both languages.

I wouldn't want to try it out myself, as speaking Italian to a Spaniard or speaking Spanish to an Italian would certainly cause language interferences between the two languages.

Fasulye

Edited by Fasulye on 10 January 2010 at 6:28pm



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